12 GOINGS ON ABOUT TOWN crowded with figure drawings in Oriental set- tings, which are then splattered with random blobs of strong color that sometin1es aln10st obliterate the fine draftsmanship. Through Sunday, Feb. 4. / Large wall pieces made of sections of sanded Douglas-fir plywood fitted together on a flat background in such a way that the grain produces a convincing three-dimensional effect. Through Feb. [I. (Pleiades, I 52 Wooster St. Open Sundays.) BRIAN WAll-Horizontal floor pieces made of heavy-duty industrial steel-sections of I- bean1s, for exan1ple, and steel plate an inch thick-by this California-based sculptor. Through Saturday, Feb. 3. (Sculpture Now, 14 2 Greene St.) ANDY W ARHOL- W all-to-wall Warhols-sixty- seven paintings lined shoulder to shoulder around the sides of this large exhibition room, pI us sixteen more in the rear gallery. The identical pattern-a vaguely conical abstract shape-is silk-screened on each canvas, which has previously been brushed over with acrylics in various rich colors. Through March 10. (Friedrich, 393 West Broadway. Tuesdays through Saturdays, noon to 8; Sundays, noon to 6.) ARCHITECTURAL DRAWINGS-Visionary proposals for dealing with city life by celebrated archi- tects fron1 all over the world-Gropius, Mies, Kahn, Mendelsohn, Soleri, Fuller, Kikutake. The end of the hall is dominated by four huge Le Corbusier sketches (one is over twenty feet long) done in bright pastels to illustrate a series of Columbia lectures on urban plan- ning, and the other works in the exhibit have a similar dash-enough to set then1 apart from the blueprint bleakness that afflicts most exhi- bitions of this sort. Through March 24. (The Drawing Center, 137 Greene St Open Mon- days; open Wednesday evenings until 8.) GROUP SHow-An exhibit of works on paper in- cludes large, stippled-looking realist paintings by Biff Elrod 'W hich are not far removed from Pointillist; three Parisian vignettes by Red Grooms; and son1e free-form sculpture done in wet pulp and painted with watercolors by Rafael Ferrer. Through Thursday, Feb. 8. (Hoffman, 429 West Broadway.) OTH ER GALLERI ES ALICE ADAMS-N ew wood sculptures, plus work- ing drawings and photographs of outdoor sculptures. Through Saturday, Feb. 3. (Bromm, 90 West Broadway, at Chambers St. Opens at I.) WENDEll MINoR-Hard-edge representational paintings of Southwestern subj ects-a house by the side of the road, a riverbank strewn with boulders, a Mission-style church, a coun- try store Through Feb 17. (Hadler-Rodri- guez, 35 E. 20th St ) PHOTOGRAPHY MANUEl ALVAREZ BRAVO-A retrospective of a hundred and forty works that date from the twenties to the present. Through Sunday, Feb. 4. (Center for Inter-American Relations, 680 Park Ave., at 68th St. Daily, except Mon- days, noon to 6.) EDWARD S. CURTIS (1868-1952)-Historical docu- mentation of North AmerIcan Indian tribes. Through Feb. 24. (Prakapas, 19 E. 71st St. Open Tuesdays until 9.) JUDY DATER / JOANN FRANK-Portraits and nude studies. mostly of men. / Fifty photograms. Through Saturday, Feb. 3. (Witkin, 41 E. 57th St ) FRANK GOHLKE-The Museum of Modern Art has mounted a sho\\1 of his photographs of Midwestern grain elevators-an ongoing se- ries begun six years ago-which are seen as abstractions in the early works but become a part of broad landscapes in the later works. See below, under "Museums," for dates and tin1es. T OM MCCARTHy-Bizarre color collages by a man who said of his career as a conventional pho- tographer, "I more or less gave up." Through SaturddY, Feb. 10. (Neikrug, 224 E. 68th St. Wednesdays through Saturdays, I to 6 ) GROUP SHows-At the MUSEO DEl BARRIO. 12 30 Fifth A..ve., at I04th St.: Mexico in the twen- ties and thirties by Tina Modotti, Paul Strand, and Edward Weston. Through Feb. 25. (Tuesdays through Fridays, 10 :30 to 4: 30; Saturdays and Sundays. I I to 4.). . . PFEIFER. 825 Madison Ave., at 69th St.: Sixty S-M-T-W.T.F.S 4' f 61 181: f J 10 L self-portraits by as many women photogra- phers, whose approaches range fron1 the clas- sical to the surreal, and whose materials in- clude Xerox reproductions and pages from journals. Through Friday, Feb. 9. . . . SRAGOW. 43 Fifth A.ve., at 11th St.: A small selection of prints (some are gravures) by Kertész, Brandt, Model, and others Through Feb. 24 (Wednesdays through Saturdays, I to 6.). . . STUDIO MUSEUM IN HARLEM. 2033 Fifth Ave., at I25th St.: Works by five photographers- John Pinderhughes, Coreen Simpson, Frank Stewart, Jules Allen, and Dawoud Bey. Through March I I. (Tuesdays through Fri- days 10 to 6; Saturdays and Sundays, I to 6.). . . WHITNEY DOWNTOWN MUSEUM. 55 Water St., two blocks south of Wall St.: Industrial scenes by Charles Sheeler, Berenice Abbott, Lewis Baltz, and others. Through Feb. 28. (Mondays through Fridays, I I to 3.). . . WOLF. 30 W. 57 th St.: Photographs of Egypt in the nineteenth century. Included in the show are fifteen 16 x 20 plates made by Francis Frith in 1858. Through Saturday, Feb. 3. MUSEUMS AND LIBRARIES METROPOLITAN MUSEUM. Fifth Ave. at 82nd St.- King Tut, of course.. . . fJJ A show of more than a hundred costumes worn by dancers in Diaghilev's Ballets Russes, supplemented by costume and set sketches (by Bakst, Cocteau, others) and advertising posters. . . . fJJ An ex- hibit of fifty drawings by students of Hans Hofmann, including Helen Frankenthaler, Lee Krasner, and Giorgio Cavallon. The works date from the twenties to the fifties. Through March 4.... fJJ Fifteenth- and six- teenth-century drawings by North European artists. From the Lehman Collection. Through March 4. (Open daily except Mondays. Hours: Tuesdays, 10 to 8:45; Wednesdays through Saturdays, 10 to 4 :45; Sunèays, I I to 4 :45.) MUSEUM OF MODERN ART. I I W. 53rd St.-A show of Jackie Winsor's geometric floor sculptures made of unpainted wood, rope, nails, brick. Through March 6.... fJJ Paul Klee prints. Through April 3.... (jf An exhibit of thirty collages by Anne Ryan. Through March 6. . . . PHOTOGRAPHY: American grain elevators photo- graphed by Frank Gohlke. Through Sunday, Feb. 4 (Open daily, except Wednesdays, I I to 6, and Thursday evenings until 9.) GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM. 1071 Fifth Ave., at 89 th St.-A show of thirty-five works by Piet Mondrian (paintings and works on paper, in- cluding two sketchbooks), dating mostly from the twenties and thirties. Through Feb. 25. (Open daily except Mondays. Hours: Tues- days, I I to 8, with no admission charge from 5 to 8; Wednesdays through Sundays, I I to 5.) WHITNEY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART. 945 Madison Ave., at 75th St.-"William Carlos Williams and the A..merican Scene, 1920-40" is an ex- hibition of paintings, sculptures, photographs, and prints by artists (Den1uth, Sheeler, Hart- ley) who were either friends of the poet or who were adn1ired bv hin1. -\lso Williams men10rabilia. Through - Sunday, Feb. 4.... fJJ Thirteen paintings constitute the memorial exhibition of Lorser Feitelson ( 18 9 8 - 1 978), the influential California artist whose styles ranged fron1 post-Surrealist to hard-edge - ab- straction. Through Feb. I I. . . . COMPOSERS' SHOWCASE: On \Vednesday, J an 3 I, at 8, works by three composers, including Charles ..kl f:: ! .. . !! f · ..... ... -: · Y1 ; 1. L, . "Y9 :_: !: . . '\.' "' : "oß Schwartz whose Jazz symphony will be per- formed b Clark Terry, Zoot Sims, and Jim- my 1axwell, together with Joan Heller (so- prano) and the Contemporary Chan1ber En- sen1ble: conducted by Arthur Weisberg.... fJJ On Thursday, Feb. I, at 7 and 9 :30, John Cage will perforn1 a new solo vocal work. Tickets are now being issued on a first-con1e, first-served basis. (Open daily except Mon- days. Hours: Tuesdays, I I to 9, \vith no ad- mission charge after 6 ; Wednesdays through Saturdays, I I to 6; Sundays, noon to 6.) BROOKLYN MUSEUM. Eastern Parkway-The twenty-first National Print Exhibition in- cludes two works each by seventy-five artists. Through Feb. I I. (Open Wednesdays through Saturdays, 10 to 5; Sundays, noon to 5 ) AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY. Central Park W. at 79th St.-An exhibit of nearly sixty color photographs (plus slides) of des- ert flowers found in the American West. Through Feb. 28. (Open daily Hours: Weekdays, 10 to 4 :45, and Wednesday eve- nings until 9; Sundays, I I to 5 ) ASIA HOUSE. 112 E 64th St.-Calligraphy as a decorative forn1 in the arts of the Muslim world, demonstrated in a show of manuscript pages, pottery, textiles, and metalwork dating from the seventh century to the nineteenth. Through March II. (Open daily. Hours: Weekdays, 10 to 5, and Thursday evenings until 8:30; Sundays, I t05.) COOPER-HEWITT MUSEUM. Fifth Ave. at 91st St- A show of designs for buildings, interiors, and obj ects commissioned by the eccentric King Ludwig II of Bavaria. Also costumes, furni- ture, porcelains, and textiles that were actual- ly used by the king. Through March 25. . . . fJJ "Vienna Moderne," a show of metalwork, ceramics, glass, furniture, and fabrics pro- duced on the Donau between 1898 and 1918 Through Sunday, Feb. 4. (Open daily except Mondays. Hours: Tuesdays, 10 to 9, with no admission charge after 5 ; Wednesdays through Saturdays, 10 to 5; Sundays, noon to 5.) MORGAN LIBRARY. 29 E. 36th St.-"The Cla<:;sica] Style in Rajput Painting," an exhibit of about eighty Indian n1iniatures. Through Thursday, Feb. 8.... fJJ A display of n1anuscripts and first editions of Franz Schubert's works. Through Feb. 18.... fJJ A selection of fifty drawings that have recently been added to the museun1's collections, an10ng them a red-chalk drawing of a seashell by Watteau, and two Ingres portraits. Through Feb 18 (Open daily except Mondays. Hours: Tuesdays through Saturdays, 10: 30 to 5; Sundays, I to 5.) MUSEUM OF AMERICAN FOLK ART. 49 W. 53rd St - "The Woman Folk A..rtist in America," a display of paintings, drawings, and textiles. Among the artists are the contemporary Mat- tie Lou O'Kelley, whose painting is titled "Picking Blueberries on the Fourth," and Susan McCord, whose vine-patterned pieced- and-appliquéd cotton quilt is dated 1845. Through April 29. (Open daily, except Mon- days, 10 :30 to 5 :30, and Thursday evenings until 8.) MUSEUM OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK, Fifth Ave at 104th St.-Katharine Cornell's career is the subject of an exhibit of about two hundred objects, among them photographs by Stei- chen and Genthe, a portrait by Charles Dana Gibson, and costumes. Through Feb. 18. (Open daily except :Mondays. Hours: Tues- days through Saturdays, 10 to 5; Sundays, I to 5.) NEw YORK PUBLIC liBRARY. Fifth Ave. at 4 2 nd St.-The Berg Collection has put together an exhibit of letters, manuscripts, and first edi- tions by Henry James, Theodore Dreiser, Edith Wharton, Ellen Glasgow, and other author,; active in the eighteen-nineties. (Open daily, except Thursdays and Sundays, 10 to 6.) EXPERIMENTAL OUTPOSTS (Various avant-garde enterprises that may in- volve not only traditional art but video. elec- tronics, dance, and so on.) ARTISTS SPACE. 105 Hudson St., at Franklin St 226-3970. Exhibition hours: Tuesdays through Saturdays, I I to 6.-Drawings by Patti Sn1ith, Alan Saret, Tom Martin, Auste Peciura, and Nancy Spero; Laurie Sin1n10ns (color photographs); Pieter Holstein (three- din1ensional installation); Ken Feingold (in-